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Published: 01 November 2023
Figure 1 Alpers in Morogoro, Tanzania, June 1973, with research assistant Mohamed Halfani Msisi (Geza), son Joel, and daughter Leila. More
Journal Article
Monsoon (2023) 1 (2): 120–127.
Published: 01 November 2023
...Figure 1 Alpers in Morogoro, Tanzania, June 1973, with research assistant Mohamed Halfani Msisi (Geza), son Joel, and daughter Leila. ...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Monsoon (2023) 1 (2): 92–105.
Published: 01 November 2023
... Copyright © 2023 The Africa Institute 2023 nationalism socialism Zanzibar Tanzania print culture Just days after seizing power in January 1964, Zanzibar's new revolutionary regime began publishing a sequence of newspaper editorials that alleged islanders were the victims of a series...
Journal Article
Monsoon (2023) 1 (1): 119–136.
Published: 01 May 2023
... as his current research. [email protected] Copyright © 2023 The Africa Institute 2023 Zanzibar Dar es Salaam Tanzania East Africa history Abdul Sheriff has been at the forefront of African and Indian Ocean History for more than five decades. His groundbreaking scholarship...
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Journal Article
Monsoon (2024) 2 (2): 50–68.
Published: 01 November 2024
... of slaves that had been freed, not in the Mozambique Channel but further north between Pemba Island and the coast of the Tanzanian mainland. They were not Makua speakers, but mostly Swahili speakers and “Ngindo slaves from southern Tanzania,” some of whom had been “marched from Kilwa to Pangani” and been...
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Journal Article
Monsoon (2023) 1 (2): 46–59.
Published: 01 November 2023
... of association. 27 Nevertheless, the suggestion on the part of anti-independence actors pointed to general anxiety around the role of “minority” populations within postcolonial African states. As Nyerere's Tanzania, and, later, Idi Amin's Uganda attempted to reconcile the role of a powerful Indian minority...
Journal Article
Monsoon (2024) 2 (2): 5–9.
Published: 01 November 2024
... was a conference organized in June 2023 by the Africa Institute, Sharjah, UAE, titled “Legacies of Race and Slavery in the Atlantic and Indian Oceans,” which was held in Stone Town, Zanzibar, Tanzania, in honor of Professor Abdul Sheriff. Following welcoming remarks by Sheikha Hoor Al-Qasimi, president...
Journal Article
Monsoon (2024) 2 (1): 100–105.
Published: 01 May 2024
... writer even though he was born in Zanzibar before it became a part of Tanzania. In coming to terms with Gurnah's slippery subjectivity, I argue two points about his work and categorization as an Indian Ocean writer here. First, while we may find categorization an unsavory tool for oversimplifying authors...
Journal Article
Monsoon (2023) 1 (1): 92–106.
Published: 01 May 2023
... lower value than it was actually worth. The legal implications of the 1895 treaty came to the fore for the administration at the point of decolonization, when the future of what is now Kenya and Tanzania was being pondered by the British. While the idea of an independent coast was never seriously...
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Journal Article
Monsoon (2023) 1 (2): 75–91.
Published: 01 November 2023
... of the revolutionaries ensued. The last sultan, Sayyid Jamshid bin Harib, his family, and others with means immediately fled the island, revolutionaries established a new government, and Zanzibar was soon annexed to Tanganyika to form the present-day Republic of Tanzania. While many Zanzibari-Omanis remember...
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Journal Article
Monsoon (2024) 2 (2): 74–87.
Published: 01 November 2024
... . Langwick Stacey A. Bodies, Politics, and African Healing: The Matter of Maladies in Tanzania . Bloomington : Indiana University Press , 2011 . Lovejoy Paul E. Transformations in Slavery: A History of Slavery in Africa . Cambridge : Cambridge University Press , 2011 . Lusekelo...